FORM 10-Q

                UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549


           [X] Quarterly Report Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the
                         Securities Exchange Act of 1934
                For the quarterly period ended September 30, 2001

                                       OR

              [ ] Transition Report Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d)
                     of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
                  For the transition period from       to
                                                 -----    -----


                          Commission File Number 1-3492


                               HALLIBURTON COMPANY

                            (a Delaware Corporation)
                                   75-2677995

                               3600 Lincoln Plaza
                                  500 N. Akard
                               Dallas, Texas 75201

                   Telephone Number - Area Code (214) 978-2600

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required
to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during
the  preceding 12 months (or for such  shorter  period that the  registrant  was
required  to file  such  reports),  and  (2) has  been  subject  to such  filing
requirements for the past 90 days.
 Yes   X    No
     -----    -----

Indicate the number of shares  outstanding  of each of the  issuer's  classes of
common stock, as of the latest practicable date.

Common stock, par value $2.50 per share:
Outstanding at October 31, 2001 - 429,361,251





                                                 HALLIBURTON COMPANY

                                                        Index

                                                                                    Page No.
                                                                                   -----------
                                                                                
PART I.         FINANCIAL INFORMATION                                                 2-19

Item 1.         Financial Statements                                                   2-4

                o     Condensed Consolidated Statements of Income                        2
                o     Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets                              3
                o     Condensed Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows                    4
                o     Notes to Quarterly Financial Statements                         5-19
                      1.   Management Representations                                    5
                      2.   Business Segment Information                                5-6
                      3.   Acquisitions and Dispositions                               6-7
                      4.   Discontinued Operations                                     7-8
                      5.   Receivables                                                   8
                      6.   Inventories                                                   8
                      7.   Commitments and Contingencies                              8-12
                      8.   Income Per Share                                             13
                      9.   Comprehensive Income                                         13
                     10.   Engineering and Construction Reorganization               13-14
                     11.   Long-Term Debt and Financial Instruments                     14
                     12.   Dresser Financial Information                             14-19

Item 2.         Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and      20-28
                Results of Operations

Item 3.         Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk              28

PART II.        OTHER INFORMATION                                                    29-30

Item 6.         Listing of Exhibits and Reports on Form 8-K

Signatures                                                                              30

Exhibits:       o     Annual Performance Pay Plan as amended and restated
                      effective January 1, 2001
                o     Performance Unit Program


                                       1


PART I.       FINANCIAL INFORMATION
Item 1.  Financial Statements


                               HALLIBURTON COMPANY
                   Condensed Consolidated Statements of Income
                                   (Unaudited)
             (Millions of dollars and shares except per share data)
                                                                     Three Months                Nine Months
                                                                  Ended September 30          Ended September 30
                                                               -------------------------    ------------------------
                                                                  2001         2000            2001         2000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                              
Revenues:
Services                                                        $   2,840    $   2,589       $   8,295    $   7,526
Sales                                                                 525          413           1,506        1,169
Equity in earnings of unconsolidated affiliates                        26           22              73           56
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total revenues                                                  $   3,391    $   3,024       $   9,874    $   8,751
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Operating costs and expenses:
Cost of services                                                $   2,506    $   2,410       $   7,451    $   7,094
Cost of sales                                                         449          362           1,325        1,038
General and administrative                                             94           92             286          252
Gain on sale of marine vessels                                          -          (88)              -          (88)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total operating costs and expenses                              $   3,049    $   2,776       $   9,062    $   8,296
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------
Operating income                                                      342          248             812          455
Interest expense                                                      (34)         (38)           (115)        (104)
Interest income                                                         8            6              18           16
Foreign currency gains (losses), net                                   (2)           4              (6)          (3)
Other, net                                                              -           (1)              -           (1)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income from continuing operations before taxes, minority
     interest, and accounting change                                  314          219             709          363
Provision for income taxes                                           (126)         (84)           (285)        (140)
Minority interest in net income of subsidiaries                        (7)          (5)            (14)         (14)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income from continuing operations before accounting change            181          130             410          209
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Discontinued operations:
Income (loss) from discontinued operations, net of tax
     (provision) benefit of $1, ($16), $18, and ($44)                  (2)          27             (40)          72
Gain on disposal of discontinued operations, net of tax
     of $0, $0, $199, and $141                                          -            -             299          215
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income (loss) from discontinued operations, net                        (2)          27             259          287
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cumulative effect of accounting change, net                             -            -               1            -
--------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------
Net income                                                      $     179    $     157       $     670    $     496
====================================================================================================================

Basic income per share:
Income from continuing operations before accounting change      $    0.42    $    0.29      $     0.96    $    0.47
Income (loss) from discontinued operations                              -         0.06           (0.09)        0.16
Gain on disposal of discontinued operations                             -            -            0.70         0.49
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net income                                                      $    0.42    $    0.35       $    1.57    $    1.12
====================================================================================================================

Diluted income per share:
Income from continuing operations before accounting change      $    0.42    $    0.29       $    0.95    $    0.47
Income (loss) from discontinued operations                              -         0.06           (0.09)        0.16
Gain on disposal of discontinued operations                             -            -            0.70         0.48
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net income                                                      $    0.42    $    0.35       $    1.56    $    1.11
====================================================================================================================

Cash dividends per share                                        $   0.125    $   0.125       $   0.375    $   0.375

Basic average common shares outstanding                               428          445            427           444
Diluted average common shares outstanding                             429          451            430           448

See notes to quarterly financial statements.



                                       2




                               HALLIBURTON COMPANY
                      Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets
                                   (Unaudited)
             (Millions of dollars and shares except per share data)
                                                                 September 30        December 31
                                                                ---------------     ---------------
                                                                     2001                2000
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                            Assets
                                                                              
Current assets:
Cash and equivalents                                              $      227           $     231
Receivables:
Notes and accounts receivable, net                                     3,244               3,029
Unbilled work on uncompleted contracts                                   971                 816
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total receivables                                                      4,215               3,845
Inventories                                                              831                 723
Current deferred income taxes                                            249                 235
Net current assets of discontinued operations                              -                 298
Other current assets                                                     265                 236
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total current assets                                                   5,787               5,568
Property, plant and equipment after accumulated
     depreciation of $3,276 and $3,150                                 2,569               2,410
Equity in and advances to related companies                              476                 400
Goodwill, net                                                            592                 597
Noncurrent deferred income taxes                                         304                 340
Net noncurrent assets of discontinued operations                           -                 391
Insurance for asbestos litigation claims                                 579                  51
Other assets                                                             385                 346
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total assets                                                      $   10,692           $  10,103
===================================================================================================
             Liabilities and Shareholders' Equity
Current liabilities:
Short-term notes payable                                          $      213           $   1,570
Current maturities of long-term debt                                       4                   8
Accounts payable                                                         899                 782
Accrued employee compensation and benefits                               313                 267
Advanced billings on uncompleted contracts                               448                 288
Deferred revenues                                                         64                  98
Income taxes payable                                                     223                 113
Other current liabilities                                                613                 700
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total current liabilities                                              2,777               3,826
Long-term debt                                                         1,470               1,049
Employee compensation and benefits                                       528                 662
Asbestos litigation claims                                               704                  80
Other liabilities                                                        565                 520
Minority interest in consolidated subsidiaries                            51                  38
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total liabilities                                                      6,095               6,175
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shareholders' equity:
Common shares, par value $2.50 per share - authorized
     600 shares, issued 455 and 453 shares                             1,138               1,132
Paid-in capital in excess of par value                                   333                 259
Deferred compensation                                                    (74)                (63)
Accumulated other comprehensive income                                  (200)               (288)
Retained earnings                                                      4,242               3,733
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                       5,439               4,773
Less 26 shares of treasury stock, at cost in both periods                842                 845
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total shareholders' equity                                             4,597               3,928
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total liabilities and shareholders' equity                        $   10,692           $  10,103
===================================================================================================

See notes to quarterly financial statements.



                                       3




                               HALLIBURTON COMPANY
                 Condensed Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
                                   (Unaudited)
                              (Millions of dollars)
                                                                              Nine Months
                                                                          Ended September 30
                                                                     ------------------------------
                                                                          2001           2000
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                  
Cash flows from operating activities:
Net income                                                              $    670        $    496
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash from operations:
Income from discontinued operations                                         (259)           (287)
Depreciation, depletion and amortization                                     390             388
Provision (benefit) for deferred income taxes                                 23             (35)
Distributions from (advances to) related companies, net of
     equity in (earnings) losses                                              39             (28)
Accounting change                                                             (1)              -
Accrued special charges                                                       (6)            (63)
Other non-cash items                                                          18             (66)
Other changes, net of non-cash items:
Receivables and unbilled work                                               (354)           (643)
Inventories                                                                 (135)            (47)
Accounts payable                                                             116              41
Other working capital, net                                                  (121)            151
Other operating activities                                                   176             (96)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total cash flows from operating activities                                   556            (189)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Cash flows from investing activities:
Capital expenditures                                                        (568)           (367)
Sales of property, plant and equipment                                        77             181
(Acquisitions) dispositions of businesses, net                              (115)              6
Other investing activities                                                   (14)            (27)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total cash flows from investing activities                                  (620)           (207)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Cash flows from financing activities:
Proceeds from long-term borrowings                                           425               -
Payments on long-term borrowings                                             (13)           (309)
(Repayments) borrowings of short-term debt, net                           (1,359)           (169)
Payments of dividends to shareholders                                       (161)           (167)
Proceeds from exercises of stock options                                      25             102
Payments to reacquire common stock                                           (33)            (24)
Other financing activities                                                    (6)             (5)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total cash flows from financing activities                                (1,122)           (572)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Effect of exchange rate changes on cash                                      (19)            (14)
Net cash flows from discontinued operations                                1,201             826
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Decrease in cash and equivalents                                              (4)           (156)
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period                             231             466
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cash and equivalents at end of period                                   $    227        $    310
===================================================================================================

Supplemental disclosure of cash flow information:
Cash payments during the period for:
Interest                                                                $    118        $    114
Income taxes                                                            $    276        $    185
Non-cash investing and financing activities:
Liabilities assumed in acquisitions of businesses                       $     40        $     90
Liabilities disposed of in dispositions of businesses                   $    496        $    499

See notes to quarterly financial statements.



                                       4


                               HALLIBURTON COMPANY
                     Notes to Quarterly Financial Statements
                                   (Unaudited)

Note 1.  Management Representations
     We  employ  accounting  policies  that  are in  accordance  with  generally
accepted  accounting  principles in the United States.  Preparation of financial
statements in conformity with generally accepted accounting  principles requires
us to make estimates and assumptions that affect:
     o  the  reported  amounts  of  assets and  liabilities  and  disclosure  of
        contingent  assets  and   liabilities  at  the  date  of  the  financial
        statements; and
     o  the  reported amounts  of revenues  and expenses  during  the  reporting
        period.
 Ultimate results could differ from those estimates.
     The accompanying unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements were
prepared using generally  accepted  accounting  principles for interim financial
information,  the  instructions to Form 10-Q and applicable  rules of Regulation
S-X.  Accordingly,  these financial statements do not include all information or
footnotes  required by generally  accepted  accounting  principles  for complete
financial  statements and should be read together with our 2000 Annual Report on
Form 10-K. Prior period amounts have been reclassified to be consistent with the
current presentation.
     In our opinion,  the condensed  consolidated  financial  statements present
fairly our  financial  position as of  September  30,  2001,  the results of our
operations  for the three and nine months ended  September 30, 2001 and 2000 and
our cash flows for the nine months then ended. The results of operations for the
three and nine months ended September 30, 2001 and 2000 may not be indicative of
results for the full year.

Note 2.  Business Segment Information
     We have two business  segments - Energy  Services Group and Engineering and
Construction  Group. Our segments are organized around the products and services
provided  to our  customers.  During the fourth  quarter of 2000,  we  announced
restructuring  plans  to  combine  engineering,  construction,  fabrication  and
project management operations into one company,  Kellogg Brown & Root, reporting
as our Engineering and Construction  Group. This restructuring  resulted in some
activities  moving  from  the  Energy  Services  Group  to the  Engineering  and
Construction Group,  effective January 1, 2001. Prior periods have been restated
for this change.
     The following  table  presents  revenues and  operating  income by business
segment on a comparable basis:



                                                Three Months                 Nine Months
                                             Ended September 30          Ended September 30
                                          -----------------------      ----------------------
Millions of dollars                          2001         2000            2001       2000
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                        
Revenues:
Energy Services Group                      $ 2,309      $ 1,736         $6,554      $ 4,774
Engineering and Construction Group           1,082        1,288          3,320        3,977
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total                                      $ 3,391      $ 3,024         $9,874      $ 8,751
=============================================================================================

Operating income:
Energy Services Group                      $   321      $   228         $  788      $   390
Engineering and Construction Group              39           46             82          125
General corporate                              (18)         (26)           (58)         (60)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total                                      $   342      $   248         $  812      $   455
=============================================================================================


     Energy Services  Group.  The Energy Services Group provides a wide range of
discrete  services and products and  integrated  solutions to customers  for the
exploration,  development, and production of oil and gas. The customers for this
segment are major, national and independent oil and gas companies.  This segment
consists of:
     o  Halliburton  Energy Services  provides oilfield  services  and  products
        including discrete  products  and services and  integrated solutions for
        oil  and  gas exploration,  development and  production  throughout  the
        world.  Products and  services include  pressure pumping  equipment  and
        services,  logging  and  perforating,  drilling  systems  and  services,
        drilling   fluids  systems,  drill  bits,   specialized  completion  and
        production  equipment and services, well  control, integrated solutions,
        and reservoir description,

                                       5


     o  Landmark  Graphics   provides  integrated  exploration   and  production
        software information systems and professional services to  the petroleum
        industry, and
     o  Other product service  lines include surface/subsea operations and large
        integrated   engineering,   procurement,   and   construction   projects
        containing  both  surface  and  sub-surface  components.  Surface/subsea
        operations  provide construction, installation  and servicing  of subsea
        facilities;  flexible pipe for  offshore applications; pipeline services
        for offshore customers; pipecoating services. In addition, these product
        service lines  provide feasibility, conceptual and front-end engineering
        and  design,  project  management,  detailed  engineering,  maintenance,
        procurement,  construction site  management, commissioning,  startup and
        debottlenecking of both onshore and offshore facilities.
     Engineering and Construction  Group. The Engineering and Construction Group
provides  engineering,   procurement,   construction,  project  management,  and
facilities  operation and maintenance  for oil and gas and other  industrial and
governmental  customers.  The Engineering and Construction  Group,  operating as
Kellogg Brown & Root, includes the following five product lines:
     o  Onshore operations  comprises engineering  and construction  activities,
        including   liquefied  natural  gas,  ammonia,   crude  oil  refineries,
        petrochemical plants and natural gas plants,
     o  Offshore  operations includes  specialty offshore  deepwater engineering
        and marine technology and worldwide fabrication capabilities,
     o  Government  operations  provides  operations,  maintenance and logistics
        activities for government facilities and installations,
     o  Operations  and   maintenance  provides  services   for  private  sector
        customers,    primarily   industrial,    hydrocarbon   and    commercial
        applications, and
     o  Asia   Pacific   operations,   based   in   Australia,   provides  civil
        engineering and consulting services.

Note 3.  Acquisitions and Dispositions
     Magic Earth acquisition. In April 2001, we signed a definitive agreement to
acquire  Magic  Earth,  Inc.,  a leading 3-D  visualization  and  interpretation
technology company with broad applications in the area of data mining. Under the
agreement,  Halliburton  common stock valued at $100  million,  subject to final
purchase  price  adjustments,  will be  exchanged to acquire  Magic  Earth.  The
registration statement registering the stock to be issued to acquire Magic Earth
became  effective in October 2001. We expect the  transaction to be completed in
the fourth  quarter of 2001.  Magic Earth will become a wholly owned  subsidiary
reported within our Energy Services Group.
     PGS Data Management acquisition.  In March 2001, Landmark Graphics acquired
the PGS Data Management  division of Petroleum  Geo-Services  ASA (PGS) for $175
million.  Terms of the agreement also include a final working capital adjustment
by March 2002.  The  agreement  also calls for  Landmark to provide,  for a fee,
strategic data management and  distribution  services to PGS for three years. We
preliminarily  recorded  goodwill  based  on a 15 year  life,  of $146  million,
subject to the final valuation of intangible assets and other costs.
     PES  acquisition.  In February  2000,  we acquired the remaining 74% of the
shares of PES (International)  Limited that we did not already own. PES is based
in Aberdeen, Scotland, and has developed technology that complements Halliburton
Energy Services' real-time reservoir solutions.  To acquire the remaining 74% of
PES, we issued 1.2 million  shares of Halliburton  common stock.  We also issued
rights that will result in the issuance of up to 2.1 million  additional  shares
of Halliburton  common stock between  February 2001 and February 2002. We issued
1.0 million  shares in February  2001 and 400,000  shares in June 2001 under the
rights.  We recorded $115 million of goodwill in connection  with  acquiring the
remaining 74%.
     During the second  quarter of 2001,  we  contributed  the  majority of PES'
assets and technologies,  including $130 million of goodwill associated with the
purchase of PES, to a newly formed joint venture,  WellDynamics. We received $39
million in cash as an equity  equalization  adjustment.  The remaining assets of
PES relating to completions  and well  intervention  products have been combined
with our existing  completions  product service line. We own 50% of WellDynamics
and account for this investment using the equity method.
     European Marine Contractors Ltd. disposition. In October 2001, we signed an
agreement  to sell our 50%  interest in European  Marine  Contractors  Ltd.,  an
unconsolidated  joint venture in the Energy Services  Group.  The sales price is
$115  million  in cash plus a  contingent  payment  of up to an  additional  $28
million  based on a formula  linked to the Oil Service Index  performance.  Upon
completion of the sale, which is subject to regulatory  approvals,  we expect to
record a pretax  gain of $90  million  or $0.12  per  diluted  share  after-tax.

                                       6


Additional gains, if any,  relating to the fair value of the contingent  payment
arrangement  will be recognized at the time of the sale and adjusted  based upon
its fair value in future periods.
     Subsea joint venture. In October 2001, we signed a letter of intent to form
a new company by combining our Halliburton Subsea business with DSND Subsea ASA,
a Norwegian-based  company. The new company, which plans to begin operations the
first of next year, will be consolidated  within the Energy Services Group.  The
closing  of  the  transaction  is  subject  to  the  execution  of a  definitive
agreement,  regulatory approvals and approvals by the board of directors of each
party.

Note 4.  Discontinued Operations
     In  1999  the  Dresser  Equipment  Group  was  comprised  of six  operating
divisions and two joint ventures that  manufactured and marketed  equipment used
primarily in the energy, petrochemical,  power and transportation industries. In
late 1999 and early 2000, we sold our interests in the two joint ventures. These
joint  ventures  represented  nearly half of the group's  revenues and operating
profit  in 1999.  The sale of our  interests  in the  segment's  joint  ventures
prompted a  strategic  review of the  remaining  businesses  within the  Dresser
Equipment  Group.  As a result of this review,  we determined that the remaining
businesses  did not closely fit with our core  businesses,  long-term  goals and
strategic  objectives.  In April 2000, our Board of Directors  approved plans to
sell all the remaining businesses within the Dresser Equipment Group.
     We sold these  businesses  on April 10,  2001.  As part of the terms of the
transaction,  we retained a 5.1% equity interest in the Dresser Equipment Group,
which  has been  renamed  Dresser,  Inc.  In the  second  quarter  of  2001,  we
recognized a pretax gain on the sale of discontinued  operations of $498 million
or $299 million  after-tax.  Total value under the agreement was $1.55  billion,
less assumed  liabilities,  and resulted in cash  proceeds of $1.27 billion from
the sale. In connection  with the sale, we accrued  disposition  related  costs,
realized  $68 million of  noncurrent  deferred  income tax  assets,  and reduced
employee  compensation  and benefit  liabilities by $152 million for liabilities
assumed by the purchaser. The employee compensation and benefit liabilities were
previously  included in "Employee  compensation  and  benefits" in the condensed
consolidated balance sheets.
     Gain on disposal of discontinued operations represents the gain on the sale
of the remaining  businesses  within the Dresser  Equipment  Group in the second
quarter of 2001 and the gain on the sale of Dresser-Rand,  which was part of the
Dresser Equipment Group, in the first quarter of 2000.



                                                      Nine Months
Gain on Disposal of Discontinued                  Ended September 30
Operations                                      -----------------------
Millions of dollars                                 2001       2000
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                        
Proceeds from sale, less
    intercompany settlement                       $ 1,267     $   536
Net assets disposed                                  (769)       (180)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Gain before taxes                                     498         356
Income taxes                                         (199)       (141)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Gain on disposal of discontinued operations       $   299     $   215
=======================================================================


     The financial results of the Dresser Equipment Group through March 31, 2001
are presented as discontinued operations in our financial statements. During the
second  and third  quarter of 2001,  we  recorded  as  expense  to  discontinued
operations  $95 million,  primarily $91 million,  net of  anticipated  insurance
recoveries,  for asbestos claims arising after the 1992 divestiture of INDRESCO.
See Note 7.



                                                Three Months                  Nine Months
Income (loss) from Discontinued              Ended September 30           Ended September 30
Operations                                -------------------------    ------------------------
Millions of dollars                          2001         2000            2001        2000
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                        
Revenues                                   $    -      $   346          $   359     $ 1,037
===============================================================================================
Operating income                           $    -      $    42          $    37     $   115
Other income                                    -            1                -           1
Asbestos litigation claims, net of
   insurance recoveries                        (3)           -              (95)          -
Tax benefit (expense)                           1          (16)              18         (44)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net income (loss)                          $   (2)     $    27          $   (40)    $    72
===============================================================================================


                                       7


     Net assets of the  Dresser  Equipment  Group at  December  31,  2000 are as
follows:



                                                       December 31
Net Assets of Discontinued Operations                ---------------
Millions of dollars                                       2000
--------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                  
Receivables                                             $   286
Inventories                                                 255
Other current assets                                         22
Accounts payable                                           (104)
Other current liabilities                                  (161)
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Net current assets of discontinued operations           $   298
====================================================================

Net property, plant and equipment                       $   219
Goodwill, net                                               257
Other assets                                                 30
Employee compensation and benefits                         (113)
Other liabilities                                            (2)
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Net noncurrent assets of discontinued operations        $   391
====================================================================


Note 5.  Receivables
     Our  receivables  are generally not  collateralized.  With the exception of
claims and  change  orders  that are in the  process  of being  negotiated  with
customers,  unbilled work on uncompleted  contracts  generally  represents  work
currently  billable,  and this work is  usually  billed  during  normal  billing
processes  in the next  several  months.  Claims and change  orders  included in
unbilled  receivables  amounted to $170 million at  September  30, 2001 and $113
million at December 31, 2000.

Note 6.  Inventories
     Inventories  to support  continuing  operations  at September  30, 2001 and
December 31, 2000 are composed of the following:



                                  September 30        December 31
                                 ----------------    ---------------
Millions of dollars                   2001                2000
--------------------------------------------------------------------
                                               
Finished products and parts          $ 512               $  486
Raw materials and supplies             215                  178
Work in process                        104                   59
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Total                                $ 831               $  723
====================================================================


     Inventories on the last-in,  first-out method were $56 million at September
30, 2001 and $66 million at December  31,  2000.  If the average cost method had
been used,  total  inventories  would have been about $30  million  higher  than
reported at September 30, 2001 and $28 million  higher than reported at December
31, 2000.

Note 7.  Commitments and Contingencies
     Asbestos  litigation.  Several of our  subsidiaries,  particularly  Dresser
Industries,  Inc. and Kellogg  Brown & Root,  Inc.,  are  defendants  in a large
number of asbestos related lawsuits. The plaintiffs allege injury as a result of
exposure to asbestos in products  manufactured by former divisions of Dresser or
in materials used in  construction  or  maintenance  projects of Kellogg Brown &
Root. These claims are in three general categories:
     o  Refractory claims,
     o  Other Dresser claims, and
     o  Construction claims.
Refractory Claims
     Asbestos  was  used in a  small  number  of  products  manufactured  by the
refractories  business of Harbison-Walker  Refractories  Company,  which Dresser
acquired in 1967.  Harbison-Walker was spun-off by Dresser in 1992. At that time
Harbison-Walker  agreed to assume  liability for asbestos claims filed after the
spin-off and it agreed to defend and indemnify  Dresser from liability for those
claims.  Dresser  retained  responsibility  for asbestos claims filed before the
spin-off.   After  the  spin-off,   Dresser  and  Harbison-Walker  entered  into
coverage-in-place  agreements  with  a  number  of  insurance  companies.  Those
agreements provide both Dresser and Harbison-Walker access to the same insurance
coverage to reimburse them for defense costs,  settlements  and court  judgments

                                       8


they  pay  to  resolve  refractory  claims.   Based  on  our  negotiations  with
Harbison-Walker and our investigations,  we believe Harbison-Walker is no longer
financially able to perform its obligation to assume liability for post spin-off
refractory claims and defend Dresser from those claims.  Since the claims expose
Dresser to potential  liability when  Harbison-Walker  does not provide adequate
defense and indemnification,  Dresser is separately asserting its own defense of
refractory claims that name it as a defendant.
     Dresser and  Harbison-Walker  are now engaged in litigation  resulting from
Harbison-Walker's failure to perform its obligations under the agreement entered
into at the time of the 1992 spin-off. On August 2, 2001,  Harbison-Walker filed
a lawsuit in Jefferson  County,  Texas,  alleging  that Dresser and  Halliburton
breached the spin-off agreement and the insurance coverage-in-place  agreements.
This lawsuit also alleges that Dresser and Halliburton  commercially  disparaged
Harbison-Walker    and   tortuously    interfered   with   various   contractual
relationships.  We believe that these  allegations are without merit and we will
vigorously defend against them. On August 7, 2001, Dresser and Halliburton asked
the  Jefferson  County  court to  dismiss  Harbison-Walker's  lawsuit  and order
arbitration of this dispute as required by the spin-off agreement.
     On August 7,  2001,  Dresser  also filed a  lawsuit,  in the United  States
District  Court for the Northern  District of Texas,  against  Harbison-Walker's
parent company, RHI AG, an Austrian corporation,  Harbison-Walker's  affiliates,
and  Dresser's  insurance  companies.  In this  lawsuit,  Dresser  alleges  that
Harbison-Walker  fraudulently  billed Dresser's general  liability  insurers for
asbestos-related  costs that  Harbison-Walker  had yet to pay.  Dresser  further
alleges  Harbison-Walker,  violated  federal  mail  fraud and  money  laundering
statutes,  and the Racketeer  Influenced  Corrupt  Organizations  Act,  commonly
referred to as RICO.  Dresser  also  claims that the actions of  Harbison-Walker
constitute   common  law  conversion  and  conspiracy.   Dresser  is  seeking  a
declaratory judgment that the amounts the insurance companies improperly paid to
Harbison-Walker  in  response  to the  fraudulent  billings  do not  reduce  the
insurance coverage available to Dresser for its asbestos-related liabilities.
     In addition,  on August 7, 2001,  Dresser filed a  comprehensive  insurance
coverage  lawsuit,  in Dallas  County,  Texas,  against the companies that wrote
general  liability  insurance  that covers both  refractory  and other  asbestos
claims.  Dresser seeks, among other relief, a declaratory  judgment that Dresser
is entitled to insurance  coverage for all of its  asbestos-related  liabilities
arising out of operations before November 1, 1985. Dresser filed this lawsuit to
protect  its  insurance  coverage  in  light  of  Harbison-Walker's  attempt  to
improperly  access  this  insurance  coverage  and to  challenge  the actions of
London-based   insurers  to   unilaterally   and  improperly   modify   existing
coverage-in-place agreements.
     As of September 30, 2001 there were approximately 7,000 open and unresolved
pre-spin-off  refractory  claims against Dresser.  In addition,  we believe that
there are  approximately  182,000 open and unresolved  post spin-off  refractory
claims. We also believe that approximately 100,000 of these post spin-off claims
name Dresser as a defendant, including 17,000 to 25,000 claims in the process of
being settled by Harbison-Walker  which may become open and unresolved claims if
Harbison-Walker  is unable to complete the settlements.  We are currently in the
process of verifying the claims which named Dresser as a defendant. It is likely
that Dresser  will take up the defense of most of the  unsettled  post  spin-off
refractory claims in order to prevent Harbison-Walker from unnecessarily eroding
the insurance coverage both companies can access for these claims.
Other Dresser Claims
     As of  September  30,  2001,  there  were  approximately  109,000  open and
unresolved claims alleging injuries from asbestos used in several other types of
products formerly  manufactured by Dresser. Most of these claims involve gaskets
and packing materials used in pumps and other industrial products.
Construction Claims
     Our   Engineering   and   Construction   Group  includes   engineering  and
construction  businesses formerly operated by The M.W. Kellogg Company and Brown
& Root,  Inc.,  now combined as Kellogg  Brown & Root,  Inc. As of September 30,
2001,  there were  approximately  30,000  open and  unresolved  claims  alleging
injuries  from  asbestos  in  materials  used in  construction  and  maintenance
projects, most of which were conducted by Brown & Root. A much smaller number of
claims are  asserted  against  Kellogg.  A prior owner of Kellogg  provides us a
contractual indemnification for those claims.
     Asbestos Insurance coverage.  We have insurance coverage that reimburses us
for a substantial  portion of the costs incurred defending against open asbestos
claims. This coverage also reimburses us for a substantial portion of amounts we
pay to settle  claims and amounts  awarded in court  judgments.  The coverage is
provided by a large number of insurance  policies written by dozens of insurance
companies. The insurance companies wrote the coverage over a period of more than
30 years for our  subsidiaries  and their  predecessors.  Large  amounts of this

                                       9


coverage are now subject to  coverage-in-place  agreements  that resolve  issues
concerning  amounts  and terms of  coverage.  The amount of  insurance  coverage
available  to us depends on the nature of the alleged  exposure to asbestos  and
the specific subsidiary against which an asbestos claim is asserted.
Refractory Claims Insurance
     Dresser has a  substantial  amount of  insurance  coverage  for  refractory
asbestos claims. Many of the issues relating to this coverage have been resolved
by coverage-in-place agreements with dozens of companies,  including Equitas and
other  London-based  insurance  companies.  However,  recently Equitas and other
London-based companies have imposed new restrictive  documentation  requirements
on Dresser and other insureds.  We believe the new  requirements  are part of an
effort by these  companies to limit payment of  settlements to claimants who are
truly  impaired by exposure to asbestos and can identify the product or premises
that caused their exposure.  On August 7, 2001 Dresser filed a lawsuit in Dallas
County,  Texas against a number of these insurance companies asserting Dresser's
rights under  existing  coverage-in-place  agreements.  These  agreements  allow
Dresser to enter into  settlement  of claims for small  amounts where we believe
settlement is effective claims management without requiring claimants to produce
detailed  documentation  to  support  their  claims.  We  believe  that  the new
documentation  requirements are inconsistent with the current  coverage-in-place
agreements and are unenforceable.  The insurance companies Dresser has sued have
not refused to pay larger claim settlements  where  documentation is obtained or
where court judgments are entered.  Also, they continue to pay previously agreed
to amounts of defense costs Dresser incurs defending refractory asbestos claims.
Other Dresser Claims Insurance
     Dresser has insurance  that covers other open asbestos  claims  against it.
This  coverage is  provided  by a number of  different  policies  which  Dresser
acquired  rights to access for  coverage  of  asbestos  claims  when it acquired
businesses from other companies.  A portion of this insurance coverage is shared
with an  unaffiliated  company that acquired  other assets from the same seller.
The  unaffiliated  company is now in Chapter 11 bankruptcy and the effect of the
bankruptcy  on our  ability to continue  to access the shared  insurance  is not
resolved.  On August 28, 2001,  Dresser filed a separate lawsuit against Equitas
and other  London-based  companies  that  provide some of this  insurance.  This
lawsuit is similar to the lawsuit  described under  Refractory  Claims Insurance
above that seeks to prevent insurance companies from unilaterally  modifying the
terms of existing coverage-in-place agreements.
Construction Claims Insurance
     Nearly all  construction  asbestos claims relate to Brown & Root operations
before the 1980s. Our primary insurance coverage for these claims was written by
Highlands  Insurance  Company  during  the time it was one of our  subsidiaries.
Highlands was spun-off to our shareholders in 1996. At present  Highlands is not
paying any portion of the settlement or defense costs we incur for  construction
asbestos  claims.  On April 5, 2000 Highlands  filed a lawsuit against us in the
Delaware  Chancery  Court.  Highlands  asserted  that the insurance it wrote for
Brown & Root  that  covered  construction  asbestos  claims  was  terminated  by
agreements  between  Halliburton and Highlands at the time of the 1996 spin-off.
Although we do not believe that a termination  of this  insurance  occurred,  in
March  2001 the  Chancery  Court  ruled  that a  termination  did occur and that
Highlands  is not  obligated  to provide  coverage  for Brown & Root's  asbestos
claims.  The Delaware  Supreme Court heard oral  arguments of our appeal of this
decision on September  17, 2001.  We believe the  Chancery  Court's  decision is
wrong and that the  Delaware  Supreme  Court will reverse and return the case to
the  Chancery  Court for a trial on the merits.  We expect,  based on an opinion
from our outside legal counsel,  to ultimately  prevail in this  litigation.  We
anticipate  the Delaware  Supreme  Court's  decision  late this year or early in
2002.  In  addition,  on April 24,  2000,  we filed a lawsuit in Harris  County,
Texas,  asserting  that  Highlands has breached its  contractual  obligations to
provide  coverage  for  asbestos  claims under the policies it wrote for Brown &
Root. This lawsuit is stayed pending resolution of the Delaware  litigation.  We
are aware  that  Highland's  financial  condition  has  deteriorated  since this
litigation  began.  However,  we  believe  that  Highlands  has the  ability  to
reimburse  us for a  substantial  portion of the defense,  settlement  and other
costs we incur  defending  Brown & Root open  asbestos  claims once the Delaware
litigation  is  successfully  concluded in our favor as we expect.  In the event
Highlands  becomes unable to pay amounts owed to us for coverage of Brown & Root
open asbestos  claims,  we have the right to seek  reimbursement  from the Texas
Property and Casualty Guaranty Association.
     Claims history.  Since 1976 approximately 340,000 asbestos claims have been
filed against us. Almost all of these claims have been made in separate lawsuits
in which we are named as a  defendant  along with a number of other  defendants,
often exceeding 100 unaffiliated companies in total. During the third quarter of
2001 we received approximately 13,000 new claims,  compared to 27,000 new claims

                                       10


in the second  quarter and 18,000 new claims in the first  quarter of this year.
During the third  quarter of 2001 we closed  approximately  11,000  claims.  The
number of open claims  pending  against us at the end of each  quarter this year
and at the end of the two preceding years is as follows:



      Period Ending            Total Open Claims
--------------------------    -------------------
                           
September 30, 2001                   146,000
June 30, 2001                        145,000
March 31, 2001                       129,000
December 31, 2000                    117,000
December 31, 1999                    107,700
=================================================


     In addition to the claims  reported in the table above,  at  September  30,
2001 we  estimate  there are  approximately  100,000  open and  unresolved  post
spin-off  refractory claims naming Dresser as a defendant where  Harbison-Walker
has failed to provide Dresser with adequate defense and indemnification. Once we
have verified that Dresser is a named  defendant,  we plan to treat these claims
as open claims.
     We manage  asbestos  claims  to  achieve  settlement  of valid  claims  for
reasonable amounts. When that is not possible, we contest claims in court. Since
1976 we have resolved approximately 194,000 claims through settlements and court
proceedings at a total cost of approximately  $143 million.  We have received or
expect to receive from our insurance all but  approximately  $38 million of this
cost, resulting in an average net cost per resolved claim of less than $200.
     Reserves for asbestos claims.  We have accrued reserves for our estimate of
our  liability  for known open asbestos  claims.  We do not accrue  reserves for
unknown  claims that may be filed against us in the future.  Our estimate of the
cost of resolving open claims is based on our historical litigation  experience,
completed settlements and our estimate of amounts we will recover from insurance
companies.  Our estimate of recoveries  from  insurance  companies with which we
have  coverage-in-place  agreements,  other than Highlands Insurance Company, is
based on those  agreements.  In those instances in which agreements are still in
negotiation  or in litigation,  our estimate is based on our  expectation of our
ultimate  recovery  from  insurance  companies.  We believe  that the  insurance
companies  with  which  we have  signed  agreements  will be able to meet  their
obligations  under these  agreements.  A summary of our reserves for open claims
and corresponding insurance recoveries is as follows:



                                                     September 30        December 31
                                                   ----------------    ---------------
Millions of dollars                                     2001                2000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                 
Asbestos litigation claims                             $ 704                $ 80

Estimated insurance recoveries:
    Highlands Insurance Company                          (38)                (39)
    Other insurance carriers                            (541)                (12)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Insurance for asbestos litigation claims            (579)                (51)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net liability for known open asbestos claims           $ 125                $ 29
======================================================================================


     These reserves are included in noncurrent assets and liabilities due to the
extended time periods involved to settle claims.
     In addition to these asbestos reserves, our accounts receivable include $27
million  we expect to  collect from Highlands  Insurance Company for settlements
and defense costs we have already incurred for construction asbestos claims.  If
we are ultimately unsuccessful in the Highlands litigation, we will be unable to
collect  this $27 million as well as the $38  million  estimated  recovery  from
Highlands included in our asbestos reserves summarized above. If this occurs, it
may have a material  adverse  impact on the  results of our  operations  and our
financial position at that time.
     Accounts  receivable for billings to other insurance companies for payments
made on asbestos  claims were $13 million at September 30, 200l and December 31,
2000.

                                       11


     The  uncertainties  of asbestos  claim  litigation  and  resolution  of the
litigation with insurance companies and Harbison-Walker  described above make it
difficult  to  accurately  predict the  results of the  ultimate  resolution  of
asbestos  claims.  That  uncertainty is increased by the  possibility of adverse
court rulings or new legislation  affecting the asbestos claim litigation or the
settlement  process.  Subject to these uncertainties and based on our experience
defending  asbestos  claims and our  estimate  of amounts we will  recover  from
insurance,  we believe  that open  asbestos  claims will be  resolved  without a
material adverse effect on our financial position or the results of operations.
     Fort Ord litigation.  Brown & Root Services, now operating as Kellogg Brown
& Root,  is a  defendant  in  civil  litigation  pending  in  federal  court  in
Sacramento,  California. The lawsuit alleges that Brown & Root Services violated
provisions of the False Claims Act while  performing  work for the United States
Army at Fort Ord in California.  This lawsuit was filed by a former  employee in
1997.  Brown & Root  Services  has denied the  allegations  and is  preparing to
defend  itself at trial.  Further  proceedings  in this civil  lawsuit have been
stayed while the investigation  referred to in the next paragraph is ongoing. We
believe that it is remote that this civil litigation will result in any material
amount of damages being assessed against us.
     Although in 1998 the United States  Department of Justice  declined to join
this litigation, it has advised us that Brown & Root Services is the target of a
federal grand jury investigation  regarding the contract  administration  issues
raised in the civil litigation. Brown & Root Services has been served with grand
jury subpoenas,  which required the production of documents relating to the Fort
Ord contract and similar  contracts at other  locations.  We are  cooperating in
this  investigation.  The United  States  Department of Justice has not made any
specific allegations against Brown & Root Services.
     Environmental.   We  are  subject  to  numerous   environmental  legal  and
regulatory requirements related to our operations worldwide. We take a proactive
approach  to  evaluating  and  addressing  the   environmental   impact  of  our
operations.  Each year we assess and remediate contaminated  properties in order
to avoid future  liabilities and comply with legal and regulatory  requirements.
On occasion we are  involved in specific  environmental  litigation  and claims,
including  the clean-up of properties we own or have operated as well as efforts
to meet or correct compliance-related matters.
     Some of our subsidiaries  and former  operating  entities are involved as a
potentially  responsible party or PRP in remedial activities to clean-up several
"Superfund"  sites under United States  federal law and  comparable  state laws.
Kellogg Brown & Root is one of nine PRPs named at the Tri-State  Mining District
"Superfund" Site, also known as the Jasper County "Superfund" Site. Based on our
negotiations  with federal  regulatory  authorities  and our  evaluation  of our
responsibility for remediation at small portions of this site, we do not believe
we will be compelled  to make  expenditures  which will have a material  adverse
effect on our consolidated financial position or results of operations. However,
the United  States  Department  of the Interior  and the State of Missouri  have
indicated that they might make a separate claim against Kellogg Brown & Root for
natural resource  damages.  Discussions with them have not been concluded and we
are unable to make a judgement about the amount of damages they may seek.
     We also incur costs related to compliance with ever-changing environmental,
legal and regulatory  requirements in the jurisdictions  where we operate. It is
very  difficult to quantify the  potential  liabilities.  We do not expect these
expenditures  to have a material  adverse effect on our  consolidated  financial
position or our results of operations.
     During the second quarter of 2001, we accrued $15 million for environmental
matters  related to liabilities  retained on properties  included in the sale of
Dresser Equipment Group. Our accrued liabilities for environmental  matters were
$49 million as of September 30, 2001 and $31 million as of December 31, 2000.
     Other.  We are a party to various other legal  proceedings.  We expense the
cost of legal fees related to these  proceedings.  We believe any liabilities we
may have arising from these proceedings will not be material to our consolidated
financial position or our results of operations.

                                       12


Note 8.  Income Per Share


                                                            Three Months                    Nine Months
                                                         Ended September 30              Ended September 30
Millions of dollars and shares except                ----------------------------    ---------------------------
per share data                                           2001          2000              2001          2000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                        
Income from continuing operations before
     accounting change                                $    181      $    130          $    410      $    209
================================================================================================================
Basic weighted average shares                              428           445               427           444
Effect of common stock equivalents                           1             6                 3             4
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------
Diluted weighted average shares                            429           451               430           448
================================================================================================================

Income per common share from continuing
     operations before accounting change:
Basic                                                 $   0.42      $   0.29          $   0.96      $   0.47
================================================================================================================
Diluted                                               $   0.42      $   0.29          $   0.95      $   0.47
================================================================================================================


     Basic  income per share is based on the weighted  average  number of common
shares  outstanding  during  the  period.  Diluted  income  per  share  includes
additional  common shares that would have been  outstanding if potential  common
shares with a dilutive effect had been issued.  Excluded from the computation of
diluted  income per share are options to purchase  8.1 million  shares of common
stock which were outstanding during the nine months ended September 30, 2001 and
options to purchase 10.6 million  shares of common stock which were  outstanding
during the three months ended  September  30, 2001.  These options were excluded
because the option  exercise  price was greater than the average market price of
the common shares.

Note 9.  Comprehensive Income
     The  components of other  comprehensive  income  adjustments  to net income
include the cumulative  translation  adjustment of some of our foreign entities,
minimum  pension  liability  adjustments  and  unrealized  gains or  (losses) on
investments and derivatives.


                                                             Three Months                     Nine Months
                                                          Ended September 30              Ended September 30
                                                      ----------------------------    ----------------------------
Millions of dollars                                       2001           2000             2001          2000
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                           
Net income                                                $ 179        $  157           $  670         $ 496
Cumulative translation adjustment, net of tax                20           (79)             (26)         (140)
Less reclassification adjustment for losses
     included in net income                                   -             -              102            11
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------
Net cumulative translation adjustment, net of tax            20           (79)              76          (129)
Adjustment to minimum pension liability                       -             -               12             7
Unrealized gains (losses) on investments
       and derivatives                                       (2)            2                -             2
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total comprehensive income                                $ 197        $   80           $  758         $ 376
==================================================================================================================


     Accumulated other  comprehensive  income at September 30, 2001 and December
31, 2000 consisted of the following:


                                                              September 30         December 31
                                                             ---------------     ---------------
Millions of dollars                                               2001                2000
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                           
Cumulative translation adjustment                               $ (199)             $ (275)
Minimum pension liability                                            -                 (12)
Unrealized losses on investments and derivatives                    (1)                 (1)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total accumulated other comprehensive income                    $ (200)             $ (288)
================================================================================================


Note 10.  Engineering and Construction Reorganization
     As a result  of the  reorganization  of our  engineering  and  construction
businesses,  we took  actions in the  fourth  quarter of 2000 to reduce our cost
structure  including asset related charges of $20 million and personnel  related
charges of $16 million.  Asset  related  write-offs  of  equipment,  engineering

                                       13


reference  designs and  capitalized  software were all completed by December 31,
2000.  Personnel  related  payments  of $11  million  have  been  made  and  the
elimination of  approximately  30 senior  management  positions is substantially
complete.

Note 11.  Long-Term Debt and Financial Instruments
     In July 2001 we issued $425 million of two and five year medium-term  notes
under our  medium-term  program.  The notes  consist of $275 million of 6% fixed
rate notes due August 1, 2006 and $150  million of floating  rate notes due July
16, 2003. We may redeem the 6% fixed rate medium-term  notes in whole or in part
at  anytime  at our  option.  The  floating  rate  medium-term  notes may not be
redeemed prior to maturity. The fixed and floating rate medium-term notes do not
have sinking fund requirements.
     We seek to minimize our  exposure to changes in interest  rates by managing
our fixed rate debt to variable rate debt ratio.  In August 2001 we entered into
an interest  rate swap on a portion of our newly issued  fixed rate  medium-term
notes.  The interest  rate swap has been  designated as a fair value hedge under
SFAS No. 133 and  accordingly,  has been  reflected  at its fair value in "Other
assets" and the hedged  portion of  "Long-term  debt" has been  recorded at fair
value in the condensed consolidated balance sheets. We account for this interest
rate swap  using  the  short-cut  method,  as  described  in SFAS No.  133,  and
determined  there was no  ineffectiveness  for the period  ending  September 30,
2001.  Amounts  to be  received  or paid as a result of the swap  agreement  are
recognized as adjustments to interest  expense.  In October 2001 we entered into
another interest rate swap agreement on our 8% senior notes.

Note 12.  Dresser Financial Information
     Since  becoming a wholly owned  subsidiary,  Dresser  Industries,  Inc. has
ceased filing  periodic  reports with the  Securities  and Exchange  Commission.
Dresser's 8% guaranteed  senior  notes,  which were  initially  issued by Baroid
Corporation,  remain outstanding and are fully and unconditionally guaranteed by
Halliburton.  In January 1999, as part of a legal reorganization associated with
the  merger,   Halliburton  Delaware,  Inc.,  our  first  tier  holding  company
subsidiary,  was merged into Dresser.  The majority of our operating  assets and
activities are now included in Dresser and its subsidiaries. In August 2000, the
Securities  and  Exchange   Commission  released  revised  rules  governing  the
financial  statements  of  guarantors  and  issuers  of  guaranteed   registered
securities. The following condensed consolidating financial information presents
Halliburton and our subsidiaries on a stand-alone  basis using the equity method
of accounting for our interest in our subsidiaries.

                                       14




                                     Condensed Consolidating Statements of Income
                                        Three Months Ended September 30, 2001
                                            Non-issuer/          Dresser       Halliburton                   Consolidated
                                           Non-guarantor     Industries, Inc.    Company     Consolidating    Halliburton
Millions of dollars                        Subsidiaries         (Issuer)       (Guarantor)    Adjustments       Company
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                              
Total revenues                              $   3,391            $ 209        $  197         $  (406)        $ 3,391
Cost of revenues                               (2,955)               -             -               -          (2,955)
General and administrative                        (94)               -             -               -             (94)
Interest expense                                   (9)             (10)          (15)              -             (34)
Interest income                                     7                4            14             (17)              8
Other, net                                          5               (4)           (2)             (1)             (2)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income from continuing operations
    before taxes and minority interest            345              199           194            (424)            314
Provision for income taxes                       (129)               -             3               -            (126)
Minority interest in net income of
    subsidiaries                                   (7)               -             -               -              (7)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income from continuing operations                 209              199           197            (424)            181
Income from discontinued operations                 -               (2)            -               -              (2)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net income                                  $     209            $ 197        $  197         $  (424)        $   179
==========================================================================================================================












                                     Condensed Consolidating Statements of Income
                                        Three Months Ended September 30, 2000
                                            Non-issuer/          Dresser       Halliburton                   Consolidated
                                           Non-guarantor     Industries, Inc.    Company     Consolidating    Halliburton
Millions of dollars                        Subsidiaries         (Issuer)       (Guarantor)    Adjustments       Company
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                              
Total revenues                              $   3,024            $  78        $   53         $  (131)        $ 3,024
Cost of revenues                               (2,772)               -             -               -          (2,772)
General and administrative                        (92)               -             -               -             (92)
Gain on sale of marine vessels                     88                -             -               -              88
Interest expense                                 (110)              (8)          (19)             99             (38)
Interest income                                     6              (10)           15              (5)              6
Other, net                                          2               (4)            1               4               3
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income from continuing operations
    before taxes and minority interest            146               56            50             (33)            219
Provision for income taxes                        (90)              (3)            9               -             (84)
Minority interest in net income of
    subsidiaries                                   (5)               -             -               -              (5)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income from continuing operations                  51               53            59             (33)            130
Income from discontinued operations                27                -             -               -              27
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -----------------
Net income                                  $      78            $  53        $   59         $   (33)        $   157
==========================================================================================================================


                                       15




                                      Condensed Consolidating Statements of Income
                                          Nine Months Ended September 30, 2001
                                            Non-issuer/          Dresser       Halliburton                   Consolidated
                                           Non-guarantor     Industries, Inc.    Company     Consolidating    Halliburton
Millions of dollars                        Subsidiaries         (Issuer)       (Guarantor)    Adjustments       Company
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                              
Total revenues                                $   9,874            $ 515        $  870          $(1,385)       $ 9,874
Cost of revenues                                 (8,776)               -             -                -         (8,776)
General and administrative                         (286)               -             -                -           (286)
Interest expense                                    (30)             (27)          (59)               1           (115)
Interest income                                      16               10            43              (51)            18
Other, net                                            4              142            (6)            (146)            (6)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income from continuing operations
    before taxes, minority interest and
    accounting change                               802              640           848           (1,581)           709
Provision for income taxes                         (296)              (7)           18                -           (285)
Minority interest in net income of
    subsidiaries                                    (14)               -             -                -            (14)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income from continuing operations
    before accounting change                        492              633           866           (1,581)           410
Income from discontinued operations                  22              237             -                -            259
Cumulative effect of accounting change, net           1                -             -                -              1
----------------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------
Net income                                    $     515            $ 870        $  866          $(1,581)       $   670
==========================================================================================================================












                                     Condensed Consolidating Statements of Income
                                         Nine Months Ended September 30, 2000
                                            Non-issuer/          Dresser       Halliburton                   Consolidated
                                           Non-guarantor     Industries, Inc.    Company     Consolidating    Halliburton
Millions of dollars                        Subsidiaries         (Issuer)       (Guarantor)    Adjustments       Company
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                              
Total revenues                              $   8,751            $ 247        $  478         $  (725)        $ 8,751
Cost of revenues                               (8,132)               -             -               -          (8,132)
General and administrative                       (252)               -             -               -            (252)
Gain on sale of marine vessels                     88                -             -               -              88
Interest expense                                 (124)             (35)          (44)             99            (104)
Interest income                                    16               55            44             (99)             16
Other, net                                         (4)              (4)            -               4              (4)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income from continuing operations
    before taxes and minority interest            343              263           478            (721)            363
Provision for income taxes                       (154)               -            14               -            (140)
Minority interest in net income of
    subsidiaries                                  (14)               -             -               -             (14)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income from continuing operations                 175              263           492            (721)            209
Income from discontinued operations                72              215             -               -             287
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net income                                  $     247            $ 478        $  492         $  (721)        $   496
=======================================================================================================================


                                       16




                                        Condensed Consolidating Balance Sheets
                                                  September 30, 2001
                                            Non-issuer/          Dresser       Halliburton                   Consolidated
                                           Non-guarantor     Industries, Inc.    Company     Consolidating    Halliburton
Millions of dollars                        Subsidiaries         (Issuer)       (Guarantor)    Adjustments       Company
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Assets
                                                                                              
Current assets:
Cash and equivalents                        $     172           $     -       $    55       $      -         $   227
Receivables:
Notes and accounts receivable, net                597             2,647             -              -           3,244
Unbilled work on uncompleted contracts            971                 -             -              -             971
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total receivables                               1,568             2,647             -              -           4,215
Inventories                                       831                 -             -              -             831
Other current assets                              507                 1             6              -             514
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total current assets                            3,078             2,648            61              -           5,787
Property, plant and equipment, net              2,569                 -             -              -           2,569
Equity in and advances to
    unconsolidated affiliates                     454                22             -              -             476
Intercompany receivable from
    consolidated affiliates                     1,369                 -         2,765         (4,134)              -
Equity in and advances to
    consolidated affiliates                         -             5,292         3,171         (8,463)              -
Goodwill, net                                     507                85             -              -             592
Insurance for asbestos litigation claims          579                 -             -              -             579
Other assets                                      660                 5            24              -             689
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total assets                                $   9,216           $ 8,052       $ 6,021       $(12,597)        $10,692
==========================================================================================================================

  Liabilities and Shareholders' Equity
Current liabilities:
Accounts and notes payable                  $     881           $    56       $   179       $      -         $ 1,116
Other current liabilities                       1,372               235            54              -           1,661
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total current liabilities                       2,253               291           233              -           2,777
Long-term debt                                    200               439           831              -           1,470
Intercompany payable from
    consolidated affiliates                         -             4,134             -         (4,134)              -
Asbestos litigation claims                        704                 -             -              -             704
Other liabilities                                 990                17            86              -           1,093
Minority interest in consolidated
    subsidiaries                                   51                 -             -              -              51
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total liabilities                               4,198             4,881         1,150         (4,134)          6,095
Shareholders' equity:
Common shares                                     391                 -         1,138           (391)          1,138
Other shareholders' equity                      4,627             3,171         3,733         (8,072)          3,459
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total shareholders' equity                      5,018             3,171         4,871         (8,463)          4,597
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total liabilities and shareholders' equity  $   9,216           $ 8,052       $ 6,021       $(12,597)        $10,692
==========================================================================================================================


                                       17




                                        Condensed Consolidating Balance Sheets
                                                  December 31, 2000
                                            Non-issuer/          Dresser       Halliburton                   Consolidated
                                           Non-guarantor     Industries, Inc.    Company     Consolidating    Halliburton
Millions of dollars                        Subsidiaries         (Issuer)       (Guarantor)    Adjustments       Company
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Assets
                                                                                              
Current assets:
Cash and equivalents                        $     216           $    11       $     4       $      -         $   231
Receivables:
Notes and accounts receivable, net              2,966                63             -              -           3,029
Unbilled work on uncompleted contracts            816                 -             -              -             816
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total receivables                               3,782                63             -              -           3,845
Inventories                                       723                 -             -              -             723
Other current assets                              753                 1            15              -             769
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total current assets                            5,474                75            19              -           5,568
Property, plant and equipment, net              2,410                 -             -              -           2,410
Equity in and advances to
    unconsolidated affiliates                     258               142             -              -             400
Intercompany receivable from
    consolidated affiliates                        68                 -         2,138         (2,206)              -
Equity in and advances to
    consolidated affiliates                         -             6,558         4,220        (10,778)              -
Goodwill, net                                     510                87             -              -             597
Other assets                                    1,109                 5            14              -           1,128
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total assets                                $   9,829           $ 6,867       $ 6,391       $(12,984)        $10,103
==========================================================================================================================

  Liabilities and Shareholders' Equity
Current liabilities:
Accounts and notes payable                  $     756           $    64       $ 1,540       $      -         $ 2,360
Other current liabilities                       1,374                36            56              -           1,466
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total current liabilities                       2,130               100         1,596              -           3,826
Long-term debt                                    205               444           400              -           1,049
Intercompany payable from
    consolidated affiliates                         -             2,206             -         (2,206)              -
Other liabilities                               1,118                26           118              -           1,262
Minority interest in consolidated
    subsidiaries                                   38                 -             -              -              38
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total liabilities                               3,491             2,776         2,114         (2,206)          6,175
Shareholders' equity:
Common shares                                     391                 -         1,132           (391)          1,132
Other shareholders' equity                      5,947             4,091         3,145        (10,387)          2,796
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total shareholders' equity                      6,338             4,091         4,277        (10,778)          3,928
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total liabilities and shareholders' equity  $   9,829           $ 6,867       $ 6,391       $(12,984)        $10,103
==========================================================================================================================


                                       18



                                   Condensed Consolidating Statements of Cash Flows
                                         Nine Months Ended September 30, 2001
                                            Non-issuer/          Dresser       Halliburton                   Consolidated
                                           Non-guarantor     Industries, Inc.    Company     Consolidating    Halliburton
Millions of dollars                        Subsidiaries         (Issuer)       (Guarantor)    Adjustments       Company
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                              
Net cash flows from operating activities     $     561          $   (25)      $    20       $      -          $   556
Capital expenditures                              (568)               -             -              -             (568)
Sales of property, plant and equipment              77                -             -              -               77
Other investing activities                        (129)               -         1,096         (1,096)            (129)
Proceeds from long-term borrowings                   -                -           425              -              425
Payments on long-term borrowings                    (8)              (5)            -              -              (13)
Borrowings (repayments) of
    short-term debt, net                             -                -        (1,359)             -           (1,359)
Payments of dividends to shareholders                -                -          (161)             -             (161)
Proceeds from exercises of stock options             -                -            25              -               25
Payments to reacquire common stock                   -                -           (33)             -              (33)
Other financing activities                          42           (1,182)           38          1,096               (6)
Effect of exchange rate on cash                    (19)               -             -              -              (19)
Net cash flows from discontinued
    operations                                       -            1,201             -              -            1,201
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Increase (decrease) in cash and equivalents  $     (44)         $   (11)      $    51       $      -          $    (4)
==========================================================================================================================












                                   Condensed Consolidating Statements of Cash Flows
                                         Nine Months Ended September 30, 2000
                                            Non-issuer/          Dresser       Halliburton                   Consolidated
                                           Non-guarantor     Industries, Inc.    Company     Consolidating    Halliburton
Millions of dollars                        Subsidiaries         (Issuer)       (Guarantor)    Adjustments       Company
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                              
Net cash flows from operating activities     $     (220)         $    19        $    12       $      -          $  (189)
Capital expenditures                               (367)               -              -              -             (367)
Sales of property, plant and equipment              181                -              -              -              181
Other investing activities                          (21)               -             89            (89)             (21)
Payments on long-term borrowings                     (9)            (300)             -              -             (309)
Borrowings (repayments) of
    short-term debt, net                             14                -           (183)             -             (169)
Payments of dividends to shareholders                 -                -           (167)             -             (167)
Proceeds from exercises of stock optio  ns            -                -            102              -              102
Payments to reacquire common stock                    -                -            (24)             -              (24)
Other financing activities                         (395)             237             64             89               (5)
Effect of exchange rate on cash                     (14)               -              -              -              (14)
Net cash flows from discontinued
    operations                                      826                -              -              -              826
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Increase (decrease) in cash and equivalents  $       (5)         $   (44)       $  (107)      $      -          $  (156)
==========================================================================================================================


                                       19


Item 2.  Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results
of Operations

     In this  section,  we discuss the operating  results and general  financial
condition of Halliburton Company and its subsidiaries. We explain:
     o  factors and risks that impact our business;
     o  why our earnings and expenses for the third  quarter of 2001 differ from
        the third quarter of 2000;
     o  why our  earnings and expenses  for the first nine months of 2001 differ
        from the first nine months of 2000;
     o  factors that impacted our cash flows; and
     o  other items that  materially affect our financial condition or earnings.

BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
     Our business is organized around two business segments:
     o  Energy Services Group; and
     o  Engineering and Construction Group.
     The  results  of  Dresser  Equipment  Group are  reported  as  discontinued
operations through March 31, 2001.
     We currently operate in over 100 countries throughout the world,  providing
a  comprehensive  range of discreet and integrated  products and services to the
petroleum  industry,  and to other  industrial and governmental  customers.  The
majority of our  consolidated  revenues is derived from the sale of services and
products,  including engineering and construction  activities,  to large oil and
gas  companies.  These  services  and products  are used  throughout  the energy
industry, from the earliest phases of exploration and development of oil and gas
reserves through the refining and distribution process.
     The  industries  we serve are  highly  competitive  with  many  substantial
competitors  for each  segment.  No country  other than the United States or the
United Kingdom accounts for more than 10% of our operations. Unsettled political
conditions,  expropriation or other governmental  actions,  exchange controls or
currency  devaluation  may  result  in the  increased  business  risk in any one
country.  We believe the geographic  diversification of our business  activities
reduces the risk that loss of  business in any one country  would be material to
our consolidated results of operations.
     Halliburton Company
     Spending on  exploration  and  production  activities  and  investments  in
capital  expenditures for refining and distribution  facilities by large oil and
gas companies  have a significant  impact on the activity  levels within our two
business  segments.  Through the first nine months of 2001,  increased  customer
spending contributed to higher levels of worldwide drilling activity, especially
gas drilling in the United  States.  In the latter part of the third  quarter of
2001,  drilling  activity levels in the United States began to decline as prices
for oil and natural gas decreased due to increased economic uncertainty and high
gas storage levels in the United States.
     Drilling  activity  increases  in the  earlier  part of the  year in  North
America  generated  much of the growth in demand for our  products  and services
through  the first nine  months of 2001.  Softening  industrial  use and reduced
power  generation  over the summer months  resulted in higher gas storage levels
which placed  downward  pressure on natural gas prices.  Gas  drilling  activity
declines followed, primarily late in the third quarter.  Internationally,  crude
oil prices have remained at levels  satisfactory to provide increasing levels of
capital  spending  and  drilling,  primarily  by  major  oil and gas  companies,
including  national oil companies.  Generally,  international  oil and gas field
development projects, particularly deepwater projects in West Africa and Brazil,
have longer lead times, economics based on longer-term commodity prices, and are
less likely to be delayed due to fluctuating short-term prices.
     In the short-term,  we expect gas-drilling activity in the United States to
continue to decline into early 2002.  The severity of the winter months in North
America will be a key factor in the degree of the activity decline and timing of
the  eventual  recovery.  If prices for oil remain  stable as  compared to third
quarter  prices,  we expect  large  deepwater  projects  to  continue to provide
opportunities.  Over the longer-term,  we expect increased global demand for oil
and  natural  gas,  additional  spending  to  replace  depleting  reserves,  and
continued  technological advances in our products and services to provide growth
opportunities for our products and services.

                                       20


     Energy Services Group
     Strong  natural  gas and crude oil prices  during the first nine  months of
2001 have contributed to increased demand for the products and services provided
by the Energy  Services  Group.  Activity has been highest in the United States,
reflecting  primarily  the  increased  levels of drilling  for natural  gas. The
rotary rig count in the United States  continued to increase and averaged  1,206
rigs in the first nine  months of 2001,  an increase of 40% over the average for
the first nine months of 2000.  In the United States  drilling  activity for gas
remained  strong,  posting a 44%  increase  over the  average for the first nine
months of 2000.  Henry Hub gas prices for the first nine months of 2001 averaged
$4.62/MCF  as compared to  $3.54/MCF  average for the first nine months of 2000.
Increases in  international  rig activity also continued  through the first nine
months of 2001, up 19% compared to the first nine-months of 2000. All geographic
regions  experienced  higher activity levels,  which increased our equipment and
personnel utilization.  This higher utilization resulted in better profitability
and pricing strength, especially within the United States. Compared to the first
nine months and third quarter of 2000,  revenues for the Energy  Services  Group
were higher across all geographic regions.
     During the latter part of the third  quarter,  drilling  levels  within the
United States,  primarily  land-based gas rigs, began to decline.  Henry Hub gas
prices for the third quarter of 2001 averaged $2.84/MCF,  down from $4.46/MCF in
the third quarter of 2000 and $4.48/MCF in the second quarter of 2001. Crude oil
prices,  while  down  from  levels  earlier  in the  year,  remained  at  levels
contributing  to continued  increases in  exploration  and  production  spending
internationally  by our customers.  Recent  declines in United States rig counts
and  economic  uncertainty  within the United  States will result in  short-term
declines  in  revenues  and  operating  income  within  the  segment.  The price
increases we implemented in late 2000 and throughout  2001 combined with efforts
to manage costs should partially offset the efforts of lower activity levels and
pressure to increase  discounts.  Our drilling  systems and completion  products
have a large percentage of their business outside the United States and are also
heavily  involved in deepwater oil and gas  developments.  These product service
lines are  expected to remain  relatively  strong.  The  production  enhancement
product service line, due to its dependence on United States gas drilling,  will
be the most impacted by the current slow down.
     Engineering and Construction Group
     Due to the  long-term  nature of most major  engineering  and  construction
projects,  our  Engineering  and  Construction  Group did not  benefit  from the
positive factors which provided  opportunities for growth in the Energy Services
Group in the first  part of 2001.  While  both  segments  provide  products  and
services to many of the same customers, oilfield service activities,  especially
land-based gas drilling  activity in the United States which is more  short-term
focused,  benefited more from  increased  activity  levels.  The downturn in the
energy  industry that began in 1998 led our  customers to severely  curtail many
large  engineering and construction  projects during 2000 and into 2001.  During
this time, a series of mergers and consolidations among our major customers also
reduced  our  customers'  levels of  investment  in  refining  and  distribution
facilities  as  they  evaluated  existing   capacities.   Due  to  the  lack  of
opportunities  existing throughout 2000, combined with an extremely  competitive
global engineering and construction environment, we restructured our Engineering
and Construction Group in late 2000 and the first quarter of 2001.  Engineering,
construction,  fabrication and project  management  capabilities are now part of
one operating  segment - Kellogg Brown & Root.  Based upon our  technologies and
proven  capabilities  on complex  projects,  combined  with  recent and  pending
project  awards and current  levels of bid activity in both the  government  and
non-government  product service lines of the business,  we are optimistic  about
sustaining our financial  performance in the Engineering and Construction  Group
for the  remainder of this year.  In the latter part of this quarter we began to
see a slowdown of the economy. We also see the potential for some projects to be
cancelled  or delayed by our  customers  which may impact  activity  levels next
year. We see some of the best engineering and construction project opportunities
in liquefied  natural gas,  gas-to-liquids,  and  deepwater  production.  Growth
opportunities  also exist to provide additional support and security services to
governmental  agencies in the United States and other  countries,  including the
United Kingdom. The demand for these services is expected to grow as governments
at all levels seek to control costs and improve services by outsourcing  various
functions.

                                       21


RESULTS OF OPERATIONS IN 2001 COMPARED TO 2000
----------------------------------------------

Third Quarter of 2001 Compared with the Third Quarter of 2000



                                                 Third Quarter
REVENUES                                  ----------------------------      Increase
Millions of dollars                           2001           2000          (decrease)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                  
Energy Services Group                       $ 2,309       $ 1,736            $  573
Engineering and Construction Group            1,082         1,288              (206)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total revenues                              $ 3,391       $ 3,024            $  367
=======================================================================================


     Consolidated  revenues  in the  third  quarter  of  2001  of  $3.4  billion
increased  $367  million,  or  12%,  compared  to the  third  quarter  of  2000.
International  revenues were 61% of total revenues for the third quarter of 2001
and 64% in the third quarter of 2000.
     Energy  Services  Group revenues were $2.3 billion for the third quarter of
2001, an increase of 33% over the third quarter of 2000.  International revenues
were 56% of total  revenues in the third  quarter of 2001 compared to 58% in the
third  quarter of 2000.  Revenues  increased  across all product  service  lines
compared  to the third  quarter of 2000 due to higher rig  activity  and pricing
improvements  despite the recent  decline in oil and  natural  gas  prices.  Our
oilfield  services  product  service  line  revenue of $1.8 billion in the third
quarter  of 2001  increased  32% over the third  quarter of 2000.  The  pressure
pumping  product  service line  achieved  revenue  growth of 38% while  drilling
fluids  and  drilling  services  experienced  revenue  growth  of 34%  and  25%,
respectively.  Geographically, North America oilfield services revenue increased
by almost 40% while Latin America, Middle East and Asia Pacific all increased by
approximately 30%. Revenues have been slower to pick up in Europe/Africa,  which
increased  16%.  Revenues for the balance of the segment  increased $129 million
over the third quarter of 2000 with the largest increase attributable to a major
project in Brazil that was in start-up  phase in the third quarter of last year.
Integrated  exploration and production  information systems revenues experienced
revenue growth of 26% partially due to the acquisition of PGS Data Management as
well as increased software sales and professional services.
     Engineering and Construction Group revenues were $1.1 billion for the third
quarter of 2001, a decrease of 16% from the third quarter of 2000.  The decrease
was primarily  due to the  completion  of several  large  international  onshore
projects in the latter part of 2000 that have not yet been fully  replaced  with
new  project  awards.  Approximately  72% of the  segment's  revenue  were  from
international  activities in the third  quarter of 2001 and 2000.  Revenues from
the government  operations product service line were 8% higher with increases in
activities at our shipyard in the United Kingdom, partially offset by a decrease
in a logistical support contract in the Balkans,  which remains in a sustainment
phase.



                                                Third Quarter
OPERATING INCOME                          --------------------------     Increase
Millions of dollars                          2001          2000         (decrease)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                               
Energy Services Group                       $  321        $ 228            $  93
Engineering and Construction Group              39           46               (7)
General corporate                              (18)         (26)               8
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total operating income                      $  342        $ 248            $  94
=====================================================================================


     Consolidated  operating  income of $342 million was 38% higher in the third
quarter of 2001  compared to the third  quarter of 2000. In the third quarter of
2000, we incurred some nonrecurring items, which included the $88 million pretax
gain on the sale of marine  vessels,  and $9 million  of expense  related to the
previous  chairman's early retirement.  Excluding these items,  operating income
more than doubled.
     Energy  Services  Group  operating  income  for the third  quarter  of 2001
increased 41% over the third quarter of 2000.  Excluding the gain on the sale of
marine  vessels of $88 million in the third  quarter of 2000,  operating  income
increased  129%  over the  third  quarter  of 2000.  Operating  income  from our
oilfield  services product service line increased by 135% due to higher activity
levels  during the quarter  resulting in greater  utilization  of equipment  and
personnel and improved pricing in the United States.  Operating income increased
across all product service lines with pressure  pumping  increasing  almost 140%
along  with   substantial   increases   in  logging   and   drilling   services.
Geographically,  North  America  experienced  profitability  growth  of over 75%
benefiting from pricing  increases  implemented in late 2000 and 2001. All other
international geographic regions showed significant improvements compared to the
third  quarter  of 2000.  Operating  income  for the  remainder  of the  segment

                                       22


increased by $5 million  excluding the gain on the sale of marine vessels in the
third quarter of 2000.  About half of this  increase in operating  income was in
integrated exploration and production information systems which increased 40% on
higher revenues and improved margins.
     Engineering and  Construction  Group operating income for the third quarter
of 2001  declined by $7 million  compared to the third  quarter of 2000 on lower
revenues reflecting  activity levels.  Operating margins in the third quarter of
2001 remained  equal to the margins in the same period in the prior year despite
lower revenues.
     General corporate expense decreased $8 million as the third quarter of 2000
included  $9  million  of  expenses  recorded  for the early  retirement  of the
previous chairman.

NONOPERATING ITEMS
     Interest  expense of $34 million for the third quarter of 2001 decreased $4
million compared to the third quarter of 2000 due to lower average borrowings.
     Interest  income was $8 million in the third  quarter of 2001,  an increase
from the third quarter of 2000 interest income of $6 million.
     Foreign  exchange  gains  (losses),  net was a $2 million loss in the third
quarter of 2001 compared to $4 million gain in the third quarter of 2000.
     Provision  for income  taxes of $126 million  resulted in an effective  tax
rate of 40.1%, up from the third quarter of 2000 rate of 38.4%.
     Income from continuing  operations was $181 million in the third quarter of
2001 compared to $130 million in the third quarter of 2000.
     Income (loss) from  discontinued  operations  was a $2 million loss for the
third quarter of 2001 as compared to a $27 million gain for the third quarter of
2000. The loss in the third quarter of 2001 reflects  asbestos  related expenses
associated  with  previously  disposed  businesses.  The third  quarter  of 2000
consists of Dresser Equipment Group's net income.
     Net income for the third  quarter  of 2001 was $179  million,  or $0.42 per
diluted share. The third quarter 2000 net income was $157 million,  or $0.35 per
diluted share.

First Nine Months of 2001 Compared with the First Nine Months of 2000



                                                 First Nine Months
REVENUES                                  ---------------------------------       Increase
Millions of dollars                            2001             2000             (decrease)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                        
Energy Services Group                       $  6,554         $  4,774             $  1,780
Engineering and Construction Group             3,320            3,977                 (657)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total revenues                              $  9,874         $  8,751             $  1,123
==============================================================================================


     Consolidated  revenues  in the first  nine  months of 2001 of $9.9  billion
increased 13% compared to the first nine months of 2000.  International revenues
were 61% of total  revenues  for the  first  nine  months of 2001 and 66% in the
first nine months of 2000 as activity and pricing in the United States increased
more rapidly than internationally.
     Energy Services Group revenues  increased by $1.8 billion,  or 37%, for the
first  nine  months of 2001 from the first  nine  months of 2000.  International
revenues  were  56% of total  revenues  for the  first  nine  months  of 2001 as
compared to 61% for the first nine months of 2000. Revenues increased across all
product  service lines due to higher  worldwide rig counts and strong gas prices
combined  with  pricing  improvements  in the United  States.  Oilfield  service
product  service  lines were higher by $1.4 billion for the first nine months of
2001 compared to the first nine months of 2000. Our pressure  pumping  business,
which  represents  almost 50% of total  oilfield  service  revenue,  experienced
revenue  growth of 43% while  logging  and  drilling  fluids both  increased  by
similar percentages. Drilling services increased over 30%. Geographically, North
America  revenues  achieved  growth  of 51% and all  other  regions  experienced
revenue  growth  ranging  from 14% to 33%.  Revenues  for the  remainder  of the
segment increased by $400 million primarily due to a large multi-year project in
Brazil that was in the start-up phase in the third quarter of 2000.
     Engineering  and  Construction  Group revenues for the first nine months of
2001 decreased $657 million,  or 17%, compared to the first nine months of 2000.
The percentage  revenue decline was about the same for North America and outside
of North America. The decrease in revenues is primarily due to the completion of
several large onshore and offshore projects in 2000 which have not been replaced
with new  awards.  In  addition,  government  operations  product  service  line

                                       23


revenues from a logistical  support  contract in the Balkans region decreased by
$113 million as the project moved from  construction  phase to sustainment phase
in the first part of 2001.  Asia/Pacific product service line revenues increased
21% for the first nine months of 2001  compared to the first nine months of 2000
due to a  contract  awarded in  mid-2001  for the  construction  of a railway in
Australia.



                                                  First Nine Months
OPERATING INCOME                          ---------------------------------       Increase
Millions of dollars                            2001             2000             (decrease)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                        
Energy Services Group                       $   788          $    390              $   398
Engineering and Construction Group               82               125                  (43)
General corporate                               (58)              (60)                   2
------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ---------------
Total operating income                      $   812          $    455              $   357
==============================================================================================


     Consolidated  operating  income of $812 million was 79% higher in the first
nine months of 2001 compared to the first nine months of 2000.
     Energy  Services Group  operating  income for the first nine months of 2001
more than  doubled  compared to the first nine  months of 2000 which  included a
pretax gain on the sale of marine vessels of $88 million.  Our oilfield services
product service line operating income  increased over $480 million,  compared to
the first nine months of 2000 reflecting  increased activity levels and improved
pricing particularly in the United States.  Operating income increased over 150%
in pressure pumping,  logging, drill bits, and drilling services product service
lines.  Operating  income  from  North  America  was  higher  by 112%,  which is
attributable to higher equipment utilization and improved pricing. International
regions,  particularly  Latin  America  and the Middle  East,  made  substantial
improvements  in  operating  income  growth  for the first  nine  months of 2001
compared to the first nine months of 2000. Excluding the $88 million gain on the
sale of marine  vessels  in 2000,  operating  income  for the  remainder  of the
segment was about flat for the first nine  months of 2001  compared to the first
nine months of 2000.
     Engineering and  Construction  Group operating income decreased $43 million
for the first nine months of 2001 compared to the first nine months of 2000. The
decline  reflects  lower  revenues and the  completion of large projects in 2000
that have not been replaced with new awards.
     General  corporate  expenses  for the  first  nine  months of 2001 were $58
million compared to $60 million for the first nine months of 2000.

NONOPERATING ITEMS
     Interest  expense  of  $115  million  for the  first  nine  months  of 2001
increased $11 million compared to the first nine months of 2000. The increase is
due to higher levels of short-term  debt  outstanding  through April 2001.  This
increase in short-term debt was primarily due to repurchases of our common stock
under  our  repurchase  program  and  borrowings  associated  with  the PGS Data
Management  acquisition.  Cash  proceeds of $1.27 billion in April 2001 from the
sale of our remaining  businesses within the Dresser Equipment Group was used to
repay our short-term borrowings.
     Interest  income  was $18  million  in the  first  nine  months of 2001 and
increased $2 million compared to the first nine months in 2000.
     Foreign  exchange  gains  (losses),  net was a $6 million loss in the first
nine months of 2001  compared  to a $3 million  loss in the first nine months of
2000.
     Provision  for income  taxes of $285 million  resulted in an effective  tax
rate of 40.2% for the first nine  months of 2001,  up from the rate of 38.6% for
the first nine months of 2000.
     Income from continuing operations was $410 million in the first nine months
of 2001 compared to $209 million in the first nine months of 2000.
     Income (loss) from  discontinued  operations was a $40 million net loss, or
$0.09 per diluted share, in 2001, principally due to accrued expenses related to
asbestos  claims of disposed  businesses  (see Note 7). This loss was  partially
offset by net income from the Dresser Equipment Group of $0.05 per diluted share
for the first  quarter  of 2001.  Income  from  discontinued  operations  of $72
million,  or $0.16 per diluted  share,  for the first nine months of 2000 is the
net income from the Dresser Equipment Group.
     Gain on disposal of discontinued  operations of $299 million after-tax,  or
$0.70  per  diluted  share,  in 2001  resulted  from the  sale of our  remaining
businesses  in the Dresser  Equipment  Group in April  2001.  For the first nine
months of 2000, the gain on disposal of discontinued  operations of $215 million

                                       24


after-tax,  or  $0.48  per  diluted  share,  resulted  from  the sale of our 51%
interest in  Dresser-Rand,  formerly  part of the Dresser  Equipment  Group,  in
January 2000.
     Cumulative  effect of  accounting  change,  net of $1 million  reflects the
impact of  adoption of  Statement  of  Financial  Accounting  Standard  No. 133,
"Accounting for Derivative  Instruments and Hedging Activities." After recording
the cumulative  effect of the change our estimated annual expense under SFAS No.
133 is not expected to be materially  different from amounts  expensed under the
prior accounting treatment.
     Net income for the first nine months of 2001 was $670 million, or $1.56 per
diluted share. Net income for the first nine months of 2000 was $496 million, or
$1.11 per diluted share.

LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES
     We ended  the third  quarter  of 2001  with  cash and  equivalents  of $227
million, a decrease of $4 million from the end of 2000.
     Cash flows from  operating  activities  provided  $556 million in the first
nine months of 2001  compared to using $189  million in the first nine months of
2000. Working capital items, which include  receivables,  inventories,  accounts
payable and other working  capital,  net, used $494 million of cash in the first
nine months of 2001 compared to $498 million in the first nine months of 2000.
     Cash flows used in investing activities were $620 million in the first nine
months of 2001 and $207  million  in the  first  nine  months  of 2000.  Capital
expenditures  in the first nine months of 2001 were $568  million as compared to
$367  million for the first nine months of 2000.  In March 2001 we acquired  the
PGS Data Management  division of Petroleum  Geo-Services  ASA for  approximately
$175 million cash.
     Cash flows from  financing  activities  used $1.1 billion in the first nine
months of 2001 as compared to $572 million for the first nine months of 2000. We
used the proceeds from the sale of the remaining businesses in Dresser Equipment
Group in April 2001, the sale of Dresser-Rand  and the collection of a note from
the fourth quarter of 1999 sale of Ingersoll-Dresser Pump received in early 2000
to reduce short-term debt. We paid dividends of $161 million to our shareholders
in the first nine months of 2001 as  compared to $167  million in the first nine
months of 2000.  On July 12,  2001 we issued  $425  million of two and five year
medium-term notes under our medium-term note program.  The notes consist of $275
million of 6% fixed rate notes due August 1, 2006 and $150  million of  floating
rate  notes  due July 16,  2003.  Net  proceeds  from the two  medium-term  note
offerings  were used to reduce  short-term  debt.  In  addition,  during 2001 we
repurchased $25 million of common stock under our share  repurchase  program and
$8 million from employees to settle their income tax  liabilities  primarily for
restricted stock lapses.
     Cash flows from discontinued  operations provided $1.2 billion in the first
nine  months of 2001 as  compared  to $826  million for the first nine months of
2000. Cash flows for 2001 include the proceeds from the sale of the remainder of
Dresser  Equipment  Group of $1.3  billion.  Cash  flows for 2000  include  $913
million  of  proceeds  from  the  sales  of  our  joint  venture   interests  in
Dresser-Rand and Ingersoll-Dresser Pump.
     Capital  resources from  internally  generated  funds and access to capital
markets are sufficient to fund our working  capital  requirements  and investing
activities.  Our combined short-term notes payable and long-term debt was 27% of
total capitalization at September 30, 2001 compared to 40% at December 31, 2000.

ASBESTOS LITIGATION
     New asbestos  claims filed against us during the third quarter of 2001 were
lower than the  previous two  quarters.  In  addition,  we settled  about 11,000
claims during the third quarter.  During the second quarter we became aware that
a former subsidiary of Dresser, Harbison-Walker Refractories Company, is failing
to provide us with an adequate  indemnity  and defense from  asbestos  claims it
assumed when it was spun-off by Dresser in 1992. A more  complete  discussion of
these matters is contained in Note 7 to our Quarterly Financial Statements.

ENVIRONMENTAL MATTERS
     We are subject to numerous environmental, legal and regulatory requirements
related to our operations  worldwide.  As a result of those obligations,  we are
involved in environmental  litigation and claims,  the clean-up of properties we
own or have operated, and efforts to meet or correct compliance-related matters.

                                       25


SHARE REPURCHASE PROGRAM
     On April 25,  2000 our Board of  Directors  approved a plan to  implement a
share  repurchase  program  for up to 44  million  shares,  or about  10% of our
outstanding  common  stock.  In the third quarter of 2001,  we  repurchased  1.2
million  shares of common  stock at a cost of $25 million.  As of September  30,
2001 we had  repurchased  over 21 million shares at a cost of about $783 million
under this plan.

ACCOUNTING CHANGES
     In July 2001, the Financial  Accounting Standards Board issued Statement of
Financial  Accounting  Standards No. 141 "Business  Combinations" which requires
the  purchase  method  of  accounting  for  business  combination   transactions
initiated after June 30, 2001.
     In July 2001, the Financial  Accounting Standards Board issued SFAS No. 142
"Goodwill and Other  Intangible  Assets".  The statement  requires that goodwill
recorded on acquisitions  completed  prior to July 1, 2001 be amortized  through
December 31, 2001. Goodwill amortization is precluded on acquisitions  completed
after June 30,  2001.  Effective  January 1,  2002,  goodwill  will no longer be
amortized but will be tested for  impairment as set forth in the  statement.  We
are  currently  reviewing  the new standard and  evaluating  the effects of this
standard  on  our  future  financial  condition,   results  of  operations,  and
accounting policies and practices. Pretax amortization of goodwill for the first
nine months of 2001 totaled $32 million.
     In August 2001, the Financial  Accounting  Standards  Board issued SFAS No.
143 "Accounting for Asset Retirements Obligations" which addresses the financial
accounting  and  reporting for  obligations  associated  with the  retirement of
tangible  long-lived  assets and the associated  assets retirement cost. The new
standard  will  be  effective  for us  beginning  January  1,  2003,  and we are
currently  reviewing and  evaluating  the effects this standard will have on our
future financial condition,  results of operations,  and accounting policies and
practices.
     In October 2001, the Financial  Accounting  Standards Board issued SFAS No.
144  "Accounting  for the  Impairment  or Disposal of Long-Lived  Assets".  This
Statement  supercedes  SFAS No. 121 "Accounting for the Impairment of Long-Lived
Assets and for  Long-Lived  Assets to be Disposed  Of", and the  accounting  and
reporting provisions of APB 30, "Reporting the Results of Operations - Reporting
the Effects of Disposal of a Segment of a Business,  and Extraordinary,  Unusual
and Infrequently  Occurring Events and  Transactions".  The new standard will be
effective for us beginning  January 1, 2002, and we are currently  reviewing and
evaluating  the  effects  this  standard  will  have  on  our  future  financial
condition, results of operations, and accounting policies and practices.

CONVERSION TO THE EURO CURRENCY
     In 1999 some member  countries  of the  European  Union  established  fixed
conversion  rates between their  existing  currencies  and the European  Union's
common currency (euro).  This action was the first step towards  transition from
existing  national  currencies to the use of the euro as a common currency.  The
transition  period for the  introduction of the euro ends June 30, 2002.  Issues
resulting  from the  introduction  of the euro  include  converting  information
technology systems, reassessing currency risk, negotiating and amending existing
contracts and processing tax and accounting  records.  We have been and continue
to address  these issues and do not expect the  transition to the euro to have a
material effect on our financial condition or results of operations.  A majority
of our operations in the Euro zone are now transacting most of their business in
the euro.

FORWARD-LOOKING INFORMATION
     The Private  Securities  Litigation Reform Act of 1995 provides safe harbor
provisions for forward-looking information. Forward-looking information is based
on projections  and estimates,  not historical  information.  Some statements in
this  Form  10-Q are  forward-looking  and use  words  like  "may,"  "may  not,"
"believes," "do not believe,"  "expects," "do not expect," "do not  anticipate,"
and similar  expressions.  We may also provide  oral or written  forward-looking
information  in  other  materials  we  release  to the  public.  Forward-looking
information  involves  risks and  uncertainties  and reflects our best judgement
based on current  information.  Our  results of  operations  can be  affected by
inaccurate  assumptions we make or by known or unknown risks and  uncertainties.
In  addition,  other  factors  may affect the  accuracy  of our  forward-looking
information.  As a result,  no  forward-looking  information  can be guaranteed.
Actual events and the results of operations may vary materially.

                                       26


     While it is not possible to identify all factors,  we continue to face many
risks and  uncertainties  that could  cause  actual  results to differ  from our
forward-looking statements including:
     Geopolitical and legal
     o  trade restrictions  and economic  embargoes imposed by the United States
        and other countries;
     o  unsettled political  conditions, war,  the effects  of terrorism,  civil
        unrest,  currency  controls  and governmental  actions in  the  numerous
        countries in which we operate;
     o  operations in  countries with  significant amounts  of  political  risk,
        including, for example, Algeria, Angola, Libya, Nigeria, and Russia;
     o  changes in foreign exchange rates;
     o  changes in  governmental regulations in  the numerous countries in which
        we operate including, for example, regulations that:
        -  encourage or mandate the hiring of local contractors; and
        -  require  foreign  contractors  to  employ  citizens  of,  or purchase
           supplies from, a particular jurisdiction;
     o  litigation,   including,   for  example,   contract  disputes,  asbestos
        litigation, insurance litigation, and environmental litigation; and
     o  environmental laws, including,  for example, those that require emission
        performance standards for facilities;
     Weather related
     o  the  effects of  severe  weather  conditions,  including,  for  example,
        hurricanes and tornadoes, on operations and facilities; and
     o  the impact of prolonged severe  or mild weather conditions on the demand
        for and price of oil and natural gas;
     Customers
     o  the magnitude of governmental  spending and outsourcing for military and
        logistical support of the type that we provide;
     o  changes in capital spending by customers in the oil and gas industry for
        exploration, development, production, processing, refining, and pipeline
        delivery networks;
     o  changes in capital spending  by governments for infrastructure  projects
        of the sort that we perform;
     o  consolidation of customers in the oil and gas industry; and
     o  claim negotiations  with engineering and  construction customers on cost
        variances and change orders on major projects;
     Industry
     o  technological  and structural  changes in the  industries that we serve;
     o  sudden changes  in energy  prices that  could undermine  the fundamental
        strength of the world economy or our customers;
     o  changes in the price of oil and natural gas, resulting from:
        -  OPEC's ability to set and maintain production levels and prices for
           oil;
        -  the level of oil production by non-OPEC countries;
        -  the policies of governments regarding exploration  for and production
           and development of their oil and natural gas reserves; and
        -  the level of demand for oil and natural gas;
     o  changes  in the  price or  the availability  of commodities that we use;
     o  risks that result from  entering into fixed fee engineering, procurement
        and  construction projects of the types that we provide where failure to
        meet schedules,  cost estimates or  performance targets  could result in
        nonreimbursable costs which cause the  project not to meet  our expected
        profit margins;
     o  risks that  result from entering  into complex business arrangements for
        technically  demanding  projects  where  failure  by one or more parties
        could result in monetary penalties; and
     o  the  risk inherent in the use of derivative instruments of the sort that
        we use which could cause a change in value of the derivative instruments
        as a result of:
        -  adverse  movements in  foreign  exchange  rates, interest  rates,  or
           commodity prices, or
        -  the value  and time period of the derivative being different than the
           exposures or cash flows being hedged;


                                       27


     Personnel and mergers/reorganizations/dispositions
     o  increased competition  in the  hiring  and  retention  of  employees  in
        specific  areas, including,  for example,  energy  services  operations,
        accounting and finance;
     o  integration of acquired businesses into Halliburton, including:
        -  standardizing information  systems or integrating  data from multiple
           systems;
        -  maintaining uniform standards, controls, procedures and policies; and
        -  combining operations and personnel of acquired businesses with ours;
     o  effectively reorganizing operations and personnel within Halliburton;
     o  replacing discontinued  lines of  businesses with  acquisitions that add
        value and complement our core businesses; and
     o  successful completion of planned dispositions.
     In addition, future trends for pricing, margins, revenues and profitability
remain  difficult to predict in the  industries  we serve.  We do not assume any
responsibility  to  publicly  update  any  of  our  forward-looking   statements
regardless  of whether  factors  change as a result of new  information,  future
events or for any other reason. You should review any additional  disclosures we
make in our 10-Q,  8-K and 10-K  reports to the  United  States  Securities  and
Exchange  Commission.  We also suggest that you listen to our quarterly earnings
release conference calls with financial analysts.

Item 3.  Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk

     We are exposed to financial  instrument market risk from changes in foreign
currency  exchange  rates,  interest  rates and to a limited  extent,  commodity
prices.  We  selectively  manage these  exposures  through the use of derivative
instruments to mitigate our market risk from these  exposures.  The objective of
our risk  management  program is to protect  our cash flows  related to interest
rates and sales or purchases of goods or services from market fluctuations.  Our
use of derivative instruments includes the following types of market risk:
     o  volatility of the currency and interest rates;
     o  time horizon of the derivative instruments;
     o  market cycles; and
     o  the type of derivative instruments used.
     We do not  use  derivative  instruments  for  trading  purposes.  We do not
consider any of these risk management activities to be material.

                                       28


PART II.  OTHER INFORMATION

Item 6.  Exhibits and Reports on Form 8-K

         (a)  Exhibits

   *    10.1  Annual Performance Pay  Plan as  amended  and  restated  effective
              January 1, 2001.

   *    10.2  Performance Unit Program.

              *   Filed with this Form 10-Q.

         (b)    Reports on Form 8-K



Date Filed                     Date of Earliest Event      Description of Event
---------------------------    ------------------------    ----------------------------------------------------------
                                                     
During the third quarter of 2001:

July 12, 2001                  July 12, 2001               Item 5. Other Events for a press release announcing the
                                                           issuance of $275 million of fixed-rate notes due August
                                                           1, 2006 and $150 million of floating notes due July 16,
                                                           2003 for a total of $425 million in medium-term notes.

July 20, 2001                  July 19, 2001               Item 5. Other Events for a press release announcing the
                                                           board of directors declared a 2001 third quarter
                                                           dividend of 12.5 cents a share payable September 27,
                                                           2001 to shareholders of record at the close of business
                                                           on September 6, 2001.

July 27, 2001                  July 25, 2001               Item 5. Other Events for a press release announcing 2001
                                                           second quarter earnings.

July 27, 2001                  July 25, 2001               Item 5. Other Events for a press release announcing
                                                           Douglas L. Foshee as executive vice president and chief
                                                           financial officer effective August 6, 2001.

During the fourth quarter of 2001:

October 19, 2001               October 18, 2001            Item 5. Other Events for a press release announcing the
                                                           signing of a letter of intent to combine Halliburton
                                                           Subsea and DSND Subsea ASA.

October 26, 2001               October 23, 2001            Item 5. Other Events for a press release announcing 2001
                                                           third quarter earnings.

October 30, 2001               October 26, 2001            Item 5. Other Events for a press release announcing the
                                                           board of directors declared a 2001 fourth quarter
                                                           dividend of 12.5 cents a share payable December 20, 2001
                                                           to shareholders of record at the close of business on
                                                           November 29, 2001.

November 6, 2001               November 1, 2001            Item 5. Other Events for a press release announcing that
                                                           Halliburton KBR, formerly Kellogg Brown & Root, has acquired
                                                           GVA Consultants AB from British Maritime Technology Limited
                                                           for an undisclosed amount.

November 7, 2001               October 30, 2001            Item 5. Other Events for a press release announcing
                                                           Halliburton's dispute of asbestos claims relating to a
                                                           verdict in a Mississippi trial.


                                       29


                                   SIGNATURES


     As required by the  Securities  Exchange Act of 1934,  the  registrant  has
authorized  this  report  to be  signed  on  behalf  of  the  registrant  by the
undersigned authorized individuals.


                                       HALLIBURTON COMPANY




Date:    November 8, 2001              By: /s/     Douglas L. Foshee
     -------------------------            -----------------------------------
                                                   Douglas L. Foshee
                                              Executive Vice President and
                                                Chief Financial Officer







                                           /s/    R. Charles Muchmore, Jr.
                                           ----------------------------------
                                                  R. Charles Muchmore, Jr.
                                              Vice President and Controller and
                                                 Principal Accounting Officer

                                       30